Running a Program on a Remote Server Using SSH

April 16, 2008 – 9:21 pm

How do you run a program on a using ?

For this example we’ll have two , one named Johnny and another named Cash. Both are running openssh. Our goal is to have a program on Johnny login to Cash and run a program on Cash. To make the task a little more complex we’ll be using different users on each machine.

The first thing we’ll need to do is generate public and on Johnny. So, logged into Johnny as user ‘boy’ we create public and by creating them in the . directory as follows:

Johnny$>
/home/boy/.
Johnny$> - -t -f sue
Generating public/private key pair.
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
Your identification has been saved in sue.
Your has been saved in sue.pub.
The key is:
8d::c0:g1::1f:e3::2f:38:12::b5:3b:: boy@Johnny
Johnny$>

In the example above we picked an , sue, to identify the files that hold the generated keys. When prompted to enter a passphrase (twice) we simply hit enter twice.

As the output of - indicates, the has been saved in a file named sue.pub.

The output of - implies, but doesn’t indicate directly, that the is in a file named sue (Yes, a user named boy created a file named sue.)

Johnny$>ls -l
-—— 1 sue suegrp 887 Oct 17 14:27 sue
-—— 1 sue suegrp 223 Oct 17 14:27 sue.pub

The file, sue, will remain on Johnny for the reaminder of this exercise, but the must be moved to the , Cash. Note that the . directory itself, as well as the sue and sue. should have permissions of 700.

Now you’ll need to ftp the sue.pub file from Johnny to Cash. The user on Cash that we’ll login as is user ‘named’.

Johnny$> ftp Cash
Connected to Cash
220 Cash - Propery of Xyz. - Authorized users only
Name (Cash:boy): named
331 Password required for named.
Password:
230-Last : Oct 17 13:12:55 2003 on ftp from Johnny 230-Last login: Oct 17 16:02:11 2003 on /dev/pts/1 from Johnny
230 User named logged in.
ftp> cd .
ftp> mput sue.pub
mput sue.pub? y
200 PORT command successful.
150 Opening data connection for sue.pub.
226 Transfer complete.
224 bytes sent in 0.000781 seconds (280.1 Kbytes/s)
local: sue.pub remote: sue.pub
ftp>bye
221 Goodbye.
Johnny$>

Now we’ll telnet into Cash and concatenate the sue.pub file into /home/named/./authorized_keys file.

Cash$>
/home/named/.
Cash$> cat sue.pub >> authorized_keys
Cash$> exit
Connection closed.
Johnny$>

Let’s recap what we’ve done so far.

1) We’ve created public and on Johnny.

2) We’ve ftp’d the file, sue.pub, from Johnny to Cash.

3) We’ve telnetted to Cash, and concatenated the contents of sue.pub into authorized_keys

We’re now ready to manually login from Johnny to Cash using .

Johnny$> -i /home/boy/./sue named@Cash
The authenticity of host ‘Cash (xxx.yyy.zzz.aaa)’ can’t be established.
key is 65:11:7d:ef:ed:a3:cc:34:d1:b5:ba:c9:16:22:31:23.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
================================================================
*** NOTICE TO ALL USERS ***
================================================================
Cash$>exit
Connection to Cash closed.
Johnny$>

Now on Johnny, create a shell script called ‘boynamedsue.sh’ with the following one line of contents and chmod the script to 777.
-i /home/boy/./sue named@Cash /usr/bin/ls -l

Next, execute the script on Johnny.

Johnny$> boynamedsue.sh
================================================================
*** NOTICE TO ALL USERS ***
================================================================
-rwxrwxr-x 1 named namedgrp 10020 Oct 17 14:35 namedfile1.txt
-rw-r–r– 1 named namedgrp 680 Aug 14 16:18 namedfile.html
-rw——- 1 named namedgrp 1148 Aug 18 09:51 mbox
drwxr-xr-x 2 named namedgrp 512 Jun 17 13:38 old
Johnny$>

You just executed a program on Johnny, that logged into Cash and ran a program (unix ‘ls -l’).

The next step you’ll want to take is to replace the ‘/usr/bin/ls -l’ command in the boynamedsue.sh program with the path and name of the program that you want to run.
About The Author

C.S. Deam is a small business owner. His eBook Computer Nuggets: Non-Techie Internet Tips For In-Laws, Out-Laws, and the Rest of Society is a great gift for non-techie family members and is available at www.LinkertonPublishing.com where you can sign up for FREE E-Courses & Newsletters to help you on your path to self-employment.

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